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Iran says
atomic talks with IAEA ‘satisfactory’
TEHRAN—Iran and the U.N. atomic watchdog ended three days of
“satisfactory” talks on Thursday aimed at clearing up suspicions about
Iranian nuclear activity and will continue discussions next week, an
Iranian official said.
The talks were part of a plan Iran agreed to in August to explain past
nuclear work it kept secret for 18 years, raising suspicions of an
illicit bid for atom bombs. Tehran, which stonewalled investigators from
the International Atomic Energy Agency for years, is to provide answers
in phases by the end of the year. Iran’s deputy nuclear negotiator,
Javad Vaeedi, said the talks were “satisfactory for the two sides” and
would continue next week, the Mehr News Agency reported. It gave no
further details.
IAEA Director Mohamed ElBaradei will report to the IAEA’s 35-nation
board of governors in mid-November. If Iran has not answered sensitive
questions by then, Western powers say they will move to have harsh U.N.
sanctions adopted against Iran. The West fears Iran is covertly trying
to develop nuclear arms. Iran says it seeks only nuclear-generated
electricity.
As part of the deal, an Iranian team met IAEA officials in late
September to address questions about centrifuges used for uranium
enrichment. The process can make fuel for nuclear power plants or, if
Iran wanted, material for nuclear warheads. The latest round of talks
was held between Vaeedi and Olli Heinonen, IAEA deputy director in
charge of non-proliferation safeguards. Discussions covered P-1 and P-2
centrifuges, diplomats said.
Iran uses a 1970s vintage of centrifuge, called P-1s, prone to breakdown
if spun at high speed for long periods. It is researching an advanced
P-2 model, which can refine uranium much faster, at sites off limits to
IAEA inspectors.
Iran’s transparency deal with the IAEA has been criticized by the United
States and allies for ignoring U.N. resolutions demanding Iran suspend
enrichment. The U.N. Security Council has imposed two sets of limited
sanctions on Iran for its refusal to halt enrichment. Big powers agreed
to delay further U.N. sanctions at least until November to see if the
IAEA-Iran plan yields results, and to await a report by European Union
negotiator Javier Solana on talks meant to nudge Iran towards a
suspension.
Iran on Tuesday began talks with a delegation from the UN nuclear
watchdog on Tehran’s controversial uranium enrichment programme, state
television said. “The talks started at 2:00 pm,” the television said,
adding that the Iranian team was being led by Javad Vaidi, deputy to Ali
Larijani, Tehran’s chief nuclear negotiator.
Olli Heinonen, the International Atomic Energy Agency’s deputy director
general for safeguards, is leading the IAEA delegation in the
discussions, which are expected to last two or three days. The IAEA is
seeking details on how Iran obtained components for its P1 type
centrifuges, of which more than 2,000 are in operation at its nuclear
enrichment plant at Natanz, and on its research with the more efficient
P2 model.—Agencies
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